Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
When a man's heart is lacerated why not spell it lass-erated and be nearer the truth, ONLY INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER IN SEATTLE SEATTLE, WASH., SATURDAY, MARCH 16, 1912. ON THAINS AND NEWS STANDS Se AMER SINKS-20 DIE\ HANLON FOUND GUILTY Funeralo# creMaine igen Of JURY OUT AL Re | ALLEN GANG NIGHT BEFORE + HAS ESCAPED AGREEING Sidney ae Who yee, Cosy Herbert Hanlon, journalist and tured Yesterday, reaks | writer, was found guilty by a jury Away—Pouses After Outlaw} this morning in Judge Ronaid’s Murderers, Who Are En- court of grand larceny. trenched in Mountain Head- Hanion stands convicted of hav- quarters. ing stolen from the office of J. F. Douglas, president of the Potlatch |last year, jewelry, furs and other | valuables, which were © found lin the Hanion apartments, occu- |pled by the mother and two sons, | Herbert, 26, and Howard, 17, The case way. ie unique in the annals of criminal prosecutions, The prisoner, who made 2 good impression in court, swore on oath that he did not com mit the crime, but that his brother, Howard, was the thief The mother, weeping, swore that jher younger sen confessed to her that it was he, and not Herbert, who robbed the Donglas office. Howard himself dec! | guilt on the stand, and t |detal; how the crime | plished “1 did not do it,” said Her- bert. “t did it,” said Howard. “Both are lying,” declared the prosecuting attorney. Howard,” said the defense, “is the black sheep of the family, Con- |sider to what depths he has fallen. Herbert is jail, for a which Howard comrr ‘tted, Howard goes to Tacoma, obtains « marriage license, Incidentally com- mitted perjury by swearing he ‘s of age, end marries Anna Drath, « girl of his own age Girl-Wife at Trial. The girlwife was in throughout the trial—a slim, pretty sirl, who seemed to regard the proceedin the Nght of an en- tertalnment Howard, ONE CENT id WAS SUNK FOREVER IN THE SEA. 16.—Twenty women, are | perished today | and Oriental with the Ger. | ‘off East Bourne featured by a) ‘en the part of the | Oceana to take | women passer th both aes APR 7 THE DEATH TOLL OF THE MURDEROUS RAID OF THE ALLEN GANG OF OUT. LAWS TODAY STANDS At FIVE. IT 18 LIKELY TO BE INCREASED AT ANY MO MENT. THE DEAD Judes Thornton Commonwealth Attorney liam \ Foster, Sheriff Webb, Hetty Ayres. ane child #itness for Banal Allen, aud Men. ‘Sidney Wife of the leader of the jaws weunee attorneys Mansle, wit Low ‘ AHHH ee I Wy The artist shows how two sister battieshi ips towed the * ite accompanied the explosion in the hulk huterone o cua e | 289FeM shows the remnant of the great shi onthe port} HAVANA, March 16.—Accom. farewell as she sank { h " ‘Moods of water | ponied by American warships and | waves. in honor of he eaut ane oe Peart The re ~ - re bg Yn bom of Leche shen ine explosion which * sands ‘ pe vinited the ohty thorities here to bq on the lookout and | mous batt! wrec! jaine sounded the where the bones’ of 56 viet! eek soe wks | tan caren pared cheng gee Fior- |first call te Cuban fiberty, al! busi. of the Maine lay in a ‘om vow at ae eee gen sel has cama Pai tug ten = freed aivene, The Mas suspended “here today. coffins. Just before the fleet's aail-| MILLOVILLE, Va. March 16. | the masthead, wae aeuh to the bet.| dong Government buildings were ing the caskets were taken aboard|Porty detectives from Richmond, 16m Of the see amid a thunder y re daca from every flagstaff in the cruiser North Carolina, whieh \neaded by half a hundred deputy uma Yom hear codes ae lin | ine business section in the city en-/ accompanied the Maing to sem, and, igheriffe and a dozen feudists, at Sof the on |aaor vane on ae va Bice twined American and Cuban flags, | when the laut veal of the famoun | @aybreak today in took up the boat capsined.|as the mass of twisted metal, it Crepe bound, spread to the breeze. | vessel had sunk bencath the waver |ghase for the Alien gang of outlaws Ns passengers | decks. covered. with recee, p Bee Gees soldier — foe started north with the remaine of |whese raid on Hillevitie court. ; itixens wore bands of ber sailors, bound for their, final ‘ | 1 med : house and its sequel hi ited down, and the cd cannon boo: | Crepe resting place in Arlington cemetery. iq death pes Hg persons. hase Sona - $ FOU D GUILTY. threugh the day. Mis death will BY BERTON BRALEY bring the h list up to We're marehin’ by in praise av bim. Entrenched in Mount. All telegraph and telephone wires Kach side an’ turn an’ phase av bim, The noble, saintly ways av him |lending-to the towns and villages tn the southern section of Virginia Inewe been cut by the outlaw clan The tall, the thin, the fat Are rin’ av the green for him To make & noble scene for hit, aml the raiders, 16 strong. are be |Mewed thir morning {o bé strongly Because they all are keen for hin St. Pat! Alle followed. wr difficulty and chil ives Into Soh eet was accom: eteeeeeseeetesttess Seeeeeeeeeeeeeee Meeune (My United an Leneed Wire) HILLSVILLE, Va. March 1 Sidney Allen, leader of the Allen lelan of outlaws, today escaped Snapshot picture from the posse which effected his! son, Howard Hanlon, capture yert y in hie mountain} . home. News of th ape was ue te the departure of (h®) beought by a mountaineer, who was and the ch, Cho |sent by the posse to wurn the aw fea today and by which the Maine was sunk in deep water Pp. how # final The email fugboats were gia pe Jack Binns and Seattle the THEM by Binns DON'T MISS all written one service court ee in “Aw, Tell It to Sweeney,” Says Convict to Judge--‘‘For That, 5 Years More,” Says the Judge to the Convict Aw, toll it to Sweeney “or that,” replied Judge Gay from 10 to 20 years KE. K. Andrews, his temper when th answered the proseen- tion, “is a weak youth who ts under the dominance of his mother. She has drilled him to tell this story to save Herbert Herbert is the bread-winner—hence he cannot be spar Let Howard go to prison, if need be. Besides, he is a minor, and could only be sent to the m- formatory. His purpose In marry- ing Anna Drath was to excite sym- pathy in the event of his being placed in the dock for Herbert's crime. Ho d is innocent, but his mother would sacrifice him to save Herbert Hanlon brothers are singu- handsome men, Howard es- ially being physically attrac after a clumsy, boyish fashion. Both ha exquisite complexions and pink cheeks and blue eyes of almost hypnotic intentness. Concirding arguments were mode terday, and the case went to the jury at 3:20. After being out all night they reported at 9:40 this morning that they found Herbert guilty Atty ity om eee Ot the col-| ‘was badiy dam: | reach port in $5,000,000, |, Carry Viet, With Hife boat whieh this morning, “we will make it 19, charged w judge sente b forgery in the lost ced bim to a five term in the penitentiary, and in consequence got what amounts to a dou ble dase, and an extra year for each word he uttered. Andrews wore a smirk on his tips while the judge marks preceding the original sentence. The boy purposely avoided looking at © judge and # d supercilousiy He had been convict- ed o forne i was given a reformatory sentence While bis ged some checks in the connty jai on the latter charge while he favored reformator was of a nature that needed to make the boy realize the futility When the judge concinuded and pase y and remark | Greenville, Tenn., was found guilty | ieee, here this afternoon of performing | > ® criminal operation, which result: | ed in the death of his former secre-! tary, Mise Elsie Coe. Miss Coe, a/ Pittsburg girl, died Jan. 5, inet. Vancouver Banker | | Fonnd Not Guilty ' ‘United Frees Leased Wi: KALAMA. Wash "a March 16 The jury in the H. C. Phillips case jretarned a verdict of not guilty to- | day acquitting the president of the| | Commercial Haak of Van It } ¥as ont only 1 hour and 25 minutes. *| Phillips was charged with haying * \ recetved money for depot knowing * the bank to be in an Insolvent con- imrenched {1 a mountain pass awaiting the coming of the posses ‘The outlaws are plentifully supplied fwith ainmunition, having dashed |aerasathe North Carolina border to Mownt Airy Thureday night | raided @ hardware store and rushed back to their atronghold in the Blue | Riige mountains. The meeting be Htewen the government officers and | thee bamelite bn tain to mean great | lame of Fife ~My wife died like a good wife leneshass wan th: Imex Alien, the jto make today « Alien. She lost by jbattle with @ posse at their moun |taln home while helping defend her outlaw hueband. Allen had eluded made his re The lariy pe tive . 1 was pending, he and be came tp renient Judge Gay bh terms boys more vevere tres of attempting to o ed sen Andrew m , law spoke up © above a The «heriff was leading the boy called back and the heavier sen Jack Kastriner, also who was implicated in the same Andrews, broke down when he was called up for sentence Gay continued hie case until Monday it of © War b the iposed room, when he We're here in large Each lodge an’ great An’ though we not quiet, be Will never care for that Wid uniforms an’ band for him variety soctet with Judes Will H. Thompson, for Le gave notice of a motion anew trial, Judge Ronald “JUST THINK OF IT” ed the bond from $1,500 to * *) * et * * * i * 4) * a March 16—The B ugar bili today by @ vote of tally all the in- Lonin democrats voted * * Son * Muthwest to # Temperature ar & * ‘ * idig th a ea Finst” CO, March 16 EL Graham tried to St. Francis. 11 First” gueste @ cot in the! ELECT | 16—Bir Joseph | selentist, today Coveted Order of having been confer | | * * * > » * * “eda mE YELT AND CLARK B, March 16. f Welt = and a TE Gite today the re- a tle pres. seated in highest co-eds of the Southern Cali a eee eeeeeee a * Mitial preference | colonel and * | miles ahead in | falr voters w| Ruef. Gaby « Wed three votes *! Re kth he own fortunes Day windows company dition. When the resnit of the jary’s de lberations were made known Mra Phillips, who has been with her hasband throughout the trial, broke | down in the arms of Mrs. Bullock, the woman bailiff. Damages for Hurt Before Her Birth! ST. LOUIS, March 16.—Demand- | == ing damages for injury before ahe was born, Helen CC. Bertram, % months old, today complainant here in a suit against a atfeet car The child's right hand has no fingers. Its mother was frightened when a street car struck & wagon, whose driver held up his maimed hand when the crash came. Father and Daughter Serving as Jurors A. M. Blodgett and Mrs. Edna Waskey, father and daughter, are both acting as jurors thie month in the su- perior court. Mrs. Waskey is the wife of Frank Waskey, the first Alaska delegate to con- Gress. Father and ghter have not been on the same jury thus far. Blodgett, whose residence is at 7213 28th av. N. is serving in Judge Gay's artment, while Mre. Wase- ‘ juror in Judge Gil- liam's department. it goin; hono | wou! | man j at le | don | long | mac | histe Surgery Transforms This Criminal (By United Prove Leased Wire; MARQUETTE, Mich. March 16.—Transformed by surgery from a desperate criminal to a student and model prisoner, Raymond Holzhay, 45, the ban- dit who for years terroriz the northwest country “Black Bart,” will be from the state penitentiary in November, 1913, a new man. Holzhay has served 24 years of a life sentence for the mur- TETRAZZIN| HERE MARCH 27. Music lovers of Seattle are to be given a chance to hear Tetrazzini again. She comes to the Moore| theatre March 27, accompanied by} M. Mascal, baritone; Yves Nat, pl- fanist, and Bmillo Puyans, flutist, | streets today, [somewhere or other. There's so much celebrating to be | began last night | Dramatic club of the Church of Im jen -_ And chargers prancin’ grand for biw We're wakin’ wp the land for him St. P Come, sons of Erin, come wid us, An’ march bebind the dfum wid us An’ make the welkin, hum wid us To show Where you are at The best av saints’—a song for hin A cheerin’ loud and long for him! Och, sure, an” we are strong for bim It’s Pleased St. Pat Should Be As Anyone Can Very Well See when there in Ireland feast of Patrick should be, i7th of M attle and other plades, and the # pleased St were kings and que morrow is the 8% Patrick will neon that have been planned in or of Erin's moat popular saint id take more space than we can at shamrocks in the and there's searce a or boy to be seen that hasn't east a bit of green tied on him Good Help church Jefferson st 10:90 and 11:30 At 3:30 in the afternoon Will ‘be an entertaininent in Colise theatre, Third ay James st., under the auspices of same chureh St the organ recital in chureh at 4 p. m Butler, Rev H. k on the saint porrow evening at the P: wilate Conception producedsan pect Congregational church f yrical drama, “The Prince## of Robert 8. Osgood will preach th,” whieh told of that early day | the career_of St. Patrick Fifth av. with maases at 7 by H J, Edmor Gowen that the day isn't nd so they Patrick's . you mind nough to do it in The St (From the Saturday Review) The Seattle Star certainly established itself as a powerful newspaper influence in Seattle as a result of the nomination and election of George F. Cotterill as mayor. In the face of powerful opposition, with the Post-Intelligencer arrayed against him, the Times keeping its hands off, and the weekly press practically a unit in protest against Cotterill, The Star won its fight. Such a showing deserves this fraternal recognition. The people read The Star, but what is more, they believe in it and follow its leadership. With- out The Star Cotterill could not have been nominated. ons Be observed tomorrow at Our Lady of aud|der of Benj 40, and the nde will ron Rev 3 { ) } |shot wound. there | he hange Patrick will be the theme of|in a gniter, under # pile of decayed | Trinity Parieh| jed |waltzing half the night, but that’s the posse and was strongly barrl-| eaded in bin home. Ax fast ax the women of the family could reload his rifles he kept blazing away at the posses of detectives and deputy sheriffs, Following a short lull a posse stormed the house. Mrs, Al Jen was lying dead im a corner, with a loaded rifle in her hands. Her husband lay groaning in the cor ner, bleeding profusely from a gun You got me because 1 was too badly wounded to man my wun,” he told the leader of the MUST HANG y United Press Leased W / SAN FRANCISCO, March 16 John Rogers, convicted of the mur-| Goodman, a jewelry | for the purpose of rob # sentenced here today to] by Judge Wilson. The date for the execution will be set later, Goodman was murdered for hie diamonds, in a cellar near the Barbary Coast, His body was found salegman hery, wa grapes. While the sentence was read to Rogers, he stood before the judge's | beneh, Bis head slightly bowed and face ashy white, but otherwise he} was unmoved, At his side, remov-| ed but a fow feet, stood the brother of the defendant. Neither the aged father of the murdeted boy nor Goodman's sister, who had attend the trial from the start, was present CARRIERS’ NIGHT The mail bail tonight. enough pedal carriers are giving a exercise without | nor there. It’s the| ball, and it will be held) chi pavilion. Pos ter Russell will lead the grand march, The public is invited, There will be 200 carriers, all in nica new uniforms, ee ee eed * neither here * * Easter Slogan: * My hat's In the window, + * ee * * + |been accomplished. by You'd think they get) Bride Takes 14,000 s Mile Honeymoon mured hee jhad mor / | Cav fer cou! | } viti ner ! | & Cha here wer The Wo he 5,000, and the prisoner was taken to jail. Howard, who, pending pos- sible charges, had been held over night, was released, and left the court’ house, accompanied by his Thother and his bride. AN FRANCISCO, March it > think, one of the mob b me,” sorrowfully mur Billy” Abbott, former dive when he told the police he ched” for an $800 dia per nd. REE e * ~~ *% The foolish and the dead * * alone never change their opin. # * * jon-—Lowell. COURT LOST NERVE AN FRANCISCO, March 16.—G. atdosi, suing for $90 wages, of- 1 to prove to Justice Barnett he id sing by hiring a hall and in ng the judge, The court lost his ve and did not attend. * teeta eter eee GETS FROZEN STARE . 4 | LOS ANGELES, March 16 AN DIEGO, March 16—A/“Say, pal, I am from Chicago, and mp Clark club was organized | 1 want to see this White boy trim last night and arrangements | Rivers. Can't you help.” asked a e made for a big mass meeting, seedy individual of a pedestrian Clark men agreed to support | All he got was a frozen stare. The odrow Wilson, however, in case | pedestrian was Joe Levy, Rivers’ is ominated. The ModernAladdin’sLamp MRS. CHAS. OLSEN When Mrs in San Francisco recently Chas. Olsen arrives she com ip | pleted a 14,000-mile honeymoon t from Philadelphia Horn. Mrs, Olsen is ‘the the skipper of the crack four-masted bark John Ena She passed the of the that around bride of | 135 days du sel in have seldom woman ywly driving ne the passage ve forming stunts While the ship was along in a light breeze, a thousand | miles off the Brazilian th bride seized her camera and had a boat lowered to afford her an op jortunity to take a few snapshots of the full rigged ship. Hundreds of miles off Natal Mrs Olsen dropped overboard a_ bottle containing a letter to a brother Four days later this was picked up by some fishermen and forwarded | to its destination, | BUY DRINK, GET HAT} (By Vent Press Leased Wire) SAN FRANCISCO, March 16 Buy a drink and get a hat” reads a saloon keeper's sign here Free lunch fs out of date Busines is rushing Not a lamp that will bring you every thing you desire, but which will bring busi- ness to your store, Mr. Advertiser. The modern Aladdin’s lamp is the advertising columns of The Star. Just glance over these columns, see the many Seattle firms represented there, and ask them about the excellent results their investment in this space is bringing them. Don’t forget that The Star has a daily PAID circulation of over 40,000. This circulation is distributed in and around Seattle—where it will make customers for the advertiser—it is not dis- tributed over the four corners of the earth. And don’t forget that The Star’s acvertis- ing rates are lower per thousand circulation than are the rates of any other newspaper published in Seattle. Phone Main 9400 and Agent Will Call